A new artificial intelligence tool that can identify the building blocks of jokes has been put to the test to see if humans can become comedic geniuses when given the right prompts.
Rather than asking the AI to write the captions itself, the tool used natural language processing – a branch of AI that comprehends human language – to suggest words that could be used as a punchline based on the elements in the cartoon. A second group of 66 people then rated how funny these cartoon captions were compared to the original winning captions, which were submitted to the magazine by experienced joke writers.The captions co-authored with AI were frequently rated funnier than those written by novices without the tool, the study found. However, experienced cartoonists and writers still have an edge over the machines.
The AI model analyses the words in a description of the cartoon and generates incongruous words – the most odd or unusual words that still make sense in the context – as hints for the aspiring cartoonist.For example, when presented with the phrase “a judge washing dishes in court” the “humour generation assistant tool” suggested the writer draw inspiration from words like judge, dishes, court, shoes, house, punishments, crimes, grandmother and chef.
Source: Education Headlines (educationheadlines.net)
AI Artificial Intelligence University Of Sydney Cartoons Humor Natural Language Processing
Australia Latest News, Australia Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Source: SkyNewsAust - 🏆 7. / 78 Read more »
Source: brisbanetimes - 🏆 13. / 67 Read more »
Source: abcnews - 🏆 5. / 83 Read more »
Source: SkyNewsAust - 🏆 7. / 78 Read more »
Source: 9NewsAUS - 🏆 10. / 72 Read more »
Source: theage - 🏆 8. / 77 Read more »